Hot Topics:

Boehner stumps for Tisei in Boston

The Lowell Sun

Updated:
10/10/2012 06:37:22 AM EDT

By Andy Metzger

State House News Service

BOSTON -- A Boston fundraiser for congressional candidate Richard Tisei with U.S. House Speaker John Boehner gave Massachusetts Democrats an opening Tuesday to tie the Wakefield Republican with the national GOP agenda.

"Clearly, Speaker Boehner is not happy with the representation the voters of the 6th district (are) getting, because John Tierney is voting against the Tea Party-Boehner agenda," Massachusetts Democratic Party Chairman John Walsh said outside the downtown fundraiser at One Federal Street. "What is true is that he's found someone in Richard Tisei who's going to support him, because, why else would he be here?"

Stopping outside to speak with reporters before the fundraiser began, Tisei dismissed Walsh's claim that he had been "handpicked" by Boehner, and said the allegations about his agenda matching up with other Republicans is a sign of how Congressman Tierney's campaign has "imploded."

"It's just nonsense. Anybody who knows me knows I'm my own person. You know, I have a 26-year record in the Legislature. I have to be, in the entire United States, the only candidate who's in favor of gay marriage, who's pro-choice, who wouldn't sign the Norquist tax pledge being called a Tea Party extremist," Tisei said.

Advertisement

"It's just laughable, and I think it says more about John Tierney's character than anything else."

Tierney was not present outside the fundraiser. Boehner, who campaigned for Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney in Derry, N.H. on Monday, was unavailable to stop for questions en route from the fundraiser to the airport, his security detail told the News Service.

As the fundraiser began, Democrats had a clutch of supporters beside the doorway to One Federal Street while a slightly larger group of Tisei supporters stood on the other side of the doors. A Tisei tracker videotaped Walsh throughout the event.

The race between the incumbent, Tierney, and former state Senate minority leader, Tisei, for representation of the Sixth District on the North Shore has been watched nationally and is seen as Republicans' best chance to pick up a seat from the Massachusetts congressional delegation.

Walsh contrasted Boehner's support for Tisei with the lack of support former Gov. Bill Weld received in his bid to become ambassador to Mexico. President Bill Clinton nominated Weld for the ambassadorship but the appointment was blocked by former Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chair Jesse Helms.

"I remember when Bill Weld was going to be the ambassador to Mexico, the leaders of the Republican Party did not step up and support him because he was not going to be that kind of candidate," Walsh said.

Tisei said that the whole state would benefit by having a Republican in the House delegation, and said Tierney has been ineffective as a congressman.

"We do not have anybody in the [House] majority. There are going to be tremendous decisions that are made over the next couple of years that not only impact my congressional district but also impact the commonwealth of Massachusetts. Right now there's nobody in the room from Massachusetts, because we have an all Democratic delegation," Tisei said. "We've had John Tierney in office now for 16 years. During that 16-year period he is the only member of the congressional delegation that has never sponsored a bill that's become law. I want to have a different record of being an effective congressman and getting things done and being a problem-solver down in Washington D.C."

Former Republican Congressman Peter Blute told reporters that having a balance in Washington benefits Massachusetts and said of Tisei, "He doesn't follow the leader; that's for sure."

Asked why Boehner was in Boston for Tisei, Blute said, "It's a party function. He's helping candidates all across the country, who are Republicans. That's not uncommon."

Walsh said Tierney opposed Boehner's multiple votes to repeal the Affordable Care Act, and attempted to draw a connection between Tisei and Republican vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan's plans to turn Medicare into a voucher system.

"You look at Richard Tisei's website today, it has completely adopted the Paul Ryan language on Medicare. 'Preserve, protect, support Medicare.' That language comes right from Ryan's website, his messaging memos, Fox News. We know how Paul Ryan wants to do that; he wants to turn it into a voucher program," Walsh said.

Tisei's website features a reprint of a Salem News column he wrote arguing for "bipartisan" solution to Medicare's funding troubles and does not mention vouchers. The column does highlight Tisei's opposition to what he calls "a 15-member unelected medical review board with unprecedented powers to cut seniors' access to care by dictating payment schedules and limiting access to treatments and procedures. It will act as a rationing mechanism for care and will interfere with decisions that are typically made between a doctor and patients."

According to FactCheck.org, which has repeatedly corrected statements by politicians about the board established by the Affordable Care Act, it is specifically barred from "any recommendation to ration health care" when it makes recommendations to Congress.

Welcome to your discussion forum: Sign in with a Disqus account or your social networking account for your comment to be posted immediately, provided it meets the guidelines. (READ HOW.)
Comments made here are the sole responsibility of the person posting them; these comments do not reflect the opinion of The Sun. So keep it civil.